Interesting enough,.. I'm still running into the issue of OWA showing new email. Last time I check email, the OWA icon showed 12 but I opened it up, and had only three emails and none of them were new.
I want mine for databases, software enhancement & design for websites....etc And what ever else I tickles my fancy. 🙂
The NTG lab has a Redis and MongoDB cluster. And not multiple instances on a single VM, which you can do in a pinch, but three dedicated VMs each running one instance of the DB so it is a real cluster with failover that can be tested.
Ran through a few things, and happened upon the uninstall / repair option.
I ran the repair, which subsequently required a reboot (no surprising on a system service).
Currently the system performance has increased back to 'normal'.
memory2.png
Thanks @amytabor - That seemed to have worked. Now I have a long list of commands,.. of which to de-cypher.
There are some reports I wish to setup, and have available for later use.
And how to save that information to Excel or other forms....
No matter how small you are, Fail2Ban is an effort only on a system by system basis (so the effort scales as your deployments do) and offers serious protection levels lacking in the base install. It is far easier to configure Fail2Ban than to disable password-based access to a system.
Does anyone know if any of the Linux distros support it? or is it something they can't support because money has to be paid to the UEFI people or the OEMs so that something is embedded? Frankly I'm not exactly sure how it works.
I know for CentOS 7 in Hyper-V generation 2 I have to disable secure boot if I want the system to install.